Hebrews 11:1-40 · By Faith
Lean on the Cloud
Hebrews 11:1-40
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Apple had to issue a warning recently. Customers who were using a GPS national park hiking trails “app” on their iPhones were warned about some serious “glitches.” In several national parks the identified trailhead, the mileages, and the directional guides . . . all were completely off. Several hikers got seriously lost because they trusted downloaded trail information that was fatally flawed. Those hikers had faith in the electronic guidance their hiking “app” had given them. But that faith was rewarded with a “wandering in the wilderness” experience.

If truth be told, we don’t take much “on faith” anymore — or do we? Let’s be more precise: We don’t take much “on faith” anymore at least from human sources. Anything a politician or a government bureaucrat or a corporate CEO or now even an athlete says and swears is immediately suspicious and suspect. Network media, government warnings and recommendations of professionals like doctors, lawyers, financial advisors, tarot card readers — these days we take them all with a hefty helping of salt, or bucketfulls of aspirin.

But as the emergency Apple “app” warning revealed, we do seem to place faith in our electronics. We have more faith in Artificial Intelligence than human intelligence. We input all of our most private information — personal, financial, medical, emotional, and we trust that it is safely stored away. We routinely hit “send” secure in our faith that our message will go swiftly to its appointed destination without interception or invasion. We trust our family trips to a GPS screen and a computer-generated voice that tells us where to go.

What would you do today if your GPS suddenly instructed you to drive your car around the beltway seven times, honking your horn all along the way? What if your GPS insisted this was the only way to reach your desired destination? Would you “have faith” and follow directions?

Doubt it!

But in today’s epistle text it is that degree of faith that the author holds up as part of our great “cloud of witnesses.” At Jericho Joshua got some pretty bizarre sounding instructions from God. He and the people were to stomp around the city seven times while blowing horns and then culminate the march by gathering their voices together in one big shout-out. This was the divine answer to toppling the walled fortress city of Jericho.

Joshua and the Israelites had lived a hard scrabble life. Forty years wandering in the wilderness. Generations of slavery in Egypt. They knew it took a fight to defeat might. Yet they responded and obeyed those weird words out of faith in the God who had delivered them from slavery and promised them a future.

Faith in God.

In the ancient world this was an even more astonishing idea than it is today. The ancient “gods” were a capricious lot — sometimes finding favor with individual humans, sometimes purposefully setting them up for failure. Albert Einstein famously declared that God “did not play dice with the universe.” But for Zeus and his lot it was a non-stop Las Vegas on Olympus. They played “dice” with everyone. Reading an anthology of the antics and actions of the Greco-Roman gods is like reading a bad teen-age novel. The “gods,” like their human counterparts, are back-biting, secretly scheming, ultimately betraying, quick-silver changing, completely untrustworthy, and wholly unfaithful to the human population it supposedly governed. It was utter foolishness to have “faith” in those gods. It was the very essence of wisdom to fear those gods.

The sacred and singular relationship between Yahweh, the Creator God, and those who honored God, changed that notion of little “g” “god” forever. The long list of those who chose to have faith in God’s promises and God’s presence given in today’s epistle text is just the smallest slice of a history of real relationships between people of faith and a faithful God. Through the history of Israel humanity slowly learned that God was faithful and deserving of our faith. In victory and in defeat, in triumph and through tortures, God’s presence never faltered, and human faith had an unfailing anchor.

Living a life “by faith” opens doors to amazing possibilities.

A “by faith” life gives you an attitude of “yes” instead of “no.” A “by faith” life opens one up to receptiveness instead of defensiveness.

A “by faith” life addresses challenges and real hardships with the spirit-set (not “mind-set”) of “why not” and moves forward instead of bewailing “why me?” and collapsing in defeat.

The examples of “faithfulness” given in today’s epistle text are all over the map. Those specifically named experienced true triumphs and affirmations because of their faith. But they also fell flat with their failures. Samson and David both fell flat in the bedroom. Gideon and Barak back-peddled before going into battle. Jephthah sacrificed his daughter to honor his own words, not Gods. Samuel succumbed to political pressures and Saul paid the ultimate price.

A life of faith is not a perfectly lived life. But it is a life that knows how to re-set itself when things go off track. Faithfulness is not a state of being but a state of becoming. Faithfulness is an ever on-going process of reset and reboot.

Why is it the world steals our best lines? Could it be they steal our best lines because we don’t know we have them? We don’t’ know our own stuff? That happened with “Do it!” and with “No Fear” and now it has happened again with “The Cloud.”

Written two millennia ago, Hebrews 12:1 got there long before the people who invented “The Cloud.” The author of Hebrews extolls the ongoing power and presence of this great “cloud of witnesses” who help us define and defend our faithfulness in our lives. We don’t live “in” the past. But we live “out of” the past, and the voice and values of “The Cloud” ought to shape and steer us.

How many of you today have entrusted by faith all your most important, sensitive, personal information to “the cloud?” How many of you regularly back-up all your e-files, all your financial information, all your doodled and noodled thoughts and dreams and schemes, to “the cloud” every day? That’s all Dropbox is: The Cloud.

But I am here to tell you this morning that the electronic “cloud” that saves all that is our digital life is nothing compared to the spiritual “cloud” that gives a firm foundation and trusted firmament to our faithfulness.

The digital “Cloud” of storage will fail you.
The divine “Cloud” of stories will never fail you.

“E’en now by faith we join our hands
 With those that went before,
And greet the blood-besprinkled bands
On the eternal shore.”  - Charles Wesley

A first‑time flier was asked for a report after landing. "Well, it was all right, but I never really trusted the thing. I never really let my weight down."

We sing "Trust and Obey" and "Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus," but how many of us actually let our weight down? How many sing and mean "Take My Life and Let It Be . . ?” Or how many sing and mean “Take My Life and LET ME BE?”

Theologian Rubem Alves put the difference between faith and hope like this: “Hope is hearing the melody of the future; faith is dancing to that melody here and now.”

Will you dance to the future this morning? Will you let your weight down? Will you live by faith and not by sight? Will you trust God with all you are? Will you lean on the “Everlasting Arms?” Will you let your weight down on “the Cloud?”


COMMENTARY

This week’s epistle reading continues to the conclusion of what has been called the Hebrew’s “great faith” chapter. Beginning with a definition of faith in 11:1-3, the Hebrews’ author then proceeds to cite a long list of examples of great faithfulness, from Abraham on throughout Israel’s long history. Among those singled out and their faithfulness raised up, there are both the expected and unexpected. Abraham, Noah, Jacob, Joseph, and Moses are obvious choices. But as this litany of the faithful continues in this week’s text, some surprising individuals are selected as examples.

It’s like the old saw about the first question of heaven: “Where’s so-and-so, and what are YOU doing here?”

The first to be praised for their faith in v.29 is no less than all the Hebrews who, as they fled from Pharaoh’s pursuing army, followed Moses’ lead right into the Red Sea. Despite the fact that the faithlessness of that same group will cost them forty years of wandering in the wilderness, the Hebrews’ author chooses to highlight their one united exhibition of faith — their plunge into the waters of the sea. According to this author it was because of their faith that the fleeing Hebrews crossed safely on dry land, and it was because of their faithlessness that the Egyptians were defeated.

The short-lived, short-fused faith of the people is alluded to by the fact that the next example the author cites skips forty years, selecting an event that occurred after they had entered into Canaan. At Jericho a remarkable victory ensued from the faith of Joshua, who received and trusted a set of seemingly bizarre instructions from the Lord, and the faith of the people, who obediently followed those instructions to the letter (Joshua 6:14-16).

But even before the walls of Jericho were shouted down, that city had been the site of a very surprising act of great faithfulness. The Hebrews author holds up for praise Rahab the prostitute, who harbored Joshua’s spies and then helped them to escape over those doomed city walls. In return for this act, which was based upon her absolute faith in the power of God to give victory into the hands of the Israelites, Rahab and her family were spared.

The text now moves on to examples from the early years in Canaan, when “judges” and prophets, not kings, led the people. The author cites six individuals whose actions were motivated by faith — Gideon, Barak, Samson Jephthah, David and Samuel. Yet while each of these individuals stand tall in Israel’s history of conquests and triumphs, each also had dubious personal missteps.

  • Samson and David took infamous moral nosedives…
  • Barak and Gideon both balked at entering the battlefield…
  • Jephthah followed through on the heinous of all ill-conceived vows (Judges 11:30-31).
  • Samuel’s career was fairly exemplary, but it is doubtful that any descendent of Saul’s would have anything good to say about the man.

Yet it is their moments of faithfulness, not their moments of failure, that the Hebrews author remembers and uplifts.

Hebrew history moves into the age of the monarchy and the days of the prophets. Although after Samuel no names are named, the examples given would call to mind specific moments and individuals. David’s reign was a time of kingdom conquering, justice vetting, and promise fulfilling. The stopped-up mouths of lions refers to Daniel’s faithfulness in the lion’s den (Daniel 6:22), while the quenched fire image recalls Shadrach, Meshack, and Abendago’s willingness to be barbecued rather than bow to false gods (Daniel 3:18). The women who “received their dead by resurrection” were the widows of Zarephath (1 Kings 17:17-24) and the wealthy woman of Shunem (2Kings 4:17-37). The first of these served as an example of the prophet Elijah’s faith, the second resurrection demonstrating the faithfulness of both the mother and the prophet Elisha.

But as good as all these outcomes of faithfulness had been, the author now reminds his readers of the sometimes ultimate cost that true faith must pay. The modes of torture listed here recall the death of Eleazer (2 Maccabees 6:19, 28,30) and other Maccabean martyrs (2 Maccabees 7:1-41). The reference to being “sawn in two” alludes to the apocryphal description of the prophet Isaiah’s death (from the “Ascension of Isaiah” 1:1-3:3:12; 5:1b-14). Stoning had long been the most common form of capital punishment in Israel. It was carried out against those who broke the law and those who prophesied against lawbreakers (Jeremiah 26:23).

Faithfulness, the Hebrews’ author continues to remind his readers, does not insure a worldly life of luxury. It is remaining faithful in the face of being “destitute, persecuted, tormented” that this author praises. Having mentioned the physical resurrection received by the two children in v.35, the author asserts that those who endure deprivations, persecution, and even martyrdom do so with the faith that they shall obtain a “better resurrection.”

It is this “better resurrection” that is now possible because the long-awaited promise has been fulfilled. Despite all the faithfulness displayed by individuals throughout Israel’s long history, not one of those faithful fully received “what was promised” because the Messiah had not yet come. The game-changing sacrifice of Christ, the gift of salvation, makes possible the “better” resurrection that had not yet been available to these past generations of the faithful. At last, the way to “perfection” previous generations had not had available to them has now been offered through Christ. In the eschatological new Jerusalem, the faithful and the post-resurrection faithful will all find the fulfillment of all God’s promises.

Finally, the Hebrews’ author recasts all those faithful men and women of the past as a continuing, all-enveloping “cloud of witnesses.” The ever-present long history of faith hovers over every new generation of the faithful. They are always available to act as guideposts and gateways on every faith journey, just as “The Cloud” guided the Israelites through the wilderness by day.

The Hebrews’ author now invokes familiar athletic imagery describing continued faithfulness as a “race that is set before us.” This is a “race” that has already been won. Jesus has won the victory over sin and death and as such is the “pioneer” (“archegos”) of perfected faithfulness, the first to be welcomed into the full presence of God.

The “race” Jesus ran ahead of us took him to the cross, to what looked to the world like utter defeat. But his faithfulness took him to the ultimate victory — to “his seat at the right hand of the throne of God.” It is into holy presence that the faithfulness of all followers will ultimately take them.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet